One of the most brilliant novelists of his generation, Simon Raven was
also one of Britain's foremost television scriptwriters. His
magisterial 'Alms For Oblivion' sequence of novels concerned the
foibles and moral hubris of the upper and upper-middle classes in the
post war years and were deserved classics which acquired him an
international reputation as a writer and something of a notorious
libertine.
A larger than life character he loved cricket, gambling, alcohol and
had affairs with both sexes. Sometimes accused of snobbery he claimed
that he wrote "for people like myself, well educated, worldly and
sceptical."
His first book, Feathers of Death, the story of a homosexual romance in
the Army, was published in 1959, but he quickly discovered that he
could earn far more by writing for television. His first TV play, Royal
Foundation, was broadcast by the BBC in 1961. Several others followed
but his most famous works were his Anthony Trollope adaptations, The
Way We Live Now, a six part series which the BBC subsequently wiped and
The Pallisers (1974), which was broadcast in 26 episodes with Susan Hampshire in the
lead.
In 1974 he adapted Frances Donaldson's _"Edward & Mrs. Simpson" (1980) (mini)_ for Thames Television, a
seven part series which topped the ratings despite complaints from
Wallis Simpson herself and reputedly the Queen Mother. He adapted two
of Nancy Mitford's novels,
Love in a Cold Climate (1980) and The Pursuit of Love for Thames
TV and his last work for television was Julian Symons quirky whodunnit
The Blackheath Poisonings (1992) for Central Televison in 1992. Central Television earned a
reprimand from the Broadcasting Standards Council for the opening of
the series which had a particularly noisy sex scene.
In his later years Raven had planned to adapt Vanity Fair for BBC
television and also Brideshead Revisited in three episodes but neither
projects ever materialised. In an interview with The Stage newspaper,
shortly before his death, he said "I don't think there is a place for
me on television anymore. I find the strain of working under modern
telvision conditions increasing. It is too politically correct for me
these days."
Summing up his life, in the same interview, he said "I would like to
think that as a writer one had not deliberately done anyone else a bad
turn or suffered from envy. If there is to be an epitaph then let it
read: He always shared his bottle - and his bed."